Pest control leads

More pest control visits with pest, property, and treatment path clear.

A useful pest control inquiry should name the pest, property, severity, location, and whether the customer is likely to need a one-time treatment or a recurring plan.

Inspection or treatment path

The office needs the pest, property, and severity before it routes the job.

Pest demand becomes useful when the office can see the pest, property, severity, location, and whether the customer needs inspection, treatment, or recurring service.

  • pest
  • property
  • severity
  • treatment path

Pest Control: Treatment Visits

Make pest treatment feel easy to start.

Pest control buyers want the problem gone without guessing what treatment they need. Your pest control company should make inspection, treatment, and recurring protection feel easy to start.

  • Pest

    Name the problem clearly.

  • Property

    Understand where it is happening.

  • Plan

    Separate one-time treatment from recurring protection.

  • Treatment visits

    Know which calls became visits.

What a useful inquiry already includes

Know the pest and property before the visit.

The lead should identify the pest, property type, severity, location, and whether the next step is inspection, treatment, or recurring service.

  • pest type
  • property type
  • severity
  • location
  • inspection or treatment path

Pest Control

Bring in

  • treatment visits
  • inspection requests
  • recurring plan conversations
  • infestation calls

Filter out

  • research-only questions
  • unsupported pests
  • outside-service-area requests
  • one-off price shoppers

Useful starting points

Lead sources to test first.

The channel should match how this buyer starts the conversation, not just where ads are easy to buy.

Tell us what pest control work belongs on your schedule.

Tell us the treatments, inspections, plans, and service areas your team wants.

Send the pest control version.

A few words about your strongest pest control work is enough.